Archive for May 7th, 2008

Beijing Olympic – Festival food: Zongzi

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

The Dragon Boats Festival   

On the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese Lunar Calendar in 295 B.C. a virtuous minister named Qu Yuan committed suicide by drowning in the Tung Ting Lake in protest of the decadence of the court. His body was never found in spite of the local people racing out in boats trying to find him whilst, at the same time, scaring the fish with drums and throwing glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo leaves into water to feed the fish.

The day in the calendar is now known as the Dragon Boats Festival and is celebrated by races between specially built Dragon Boats crewed by members of different villages, guilds or other organizations. The races take place in southern China and throughout South East Asia, wherever there are Chinese communities. The crews have about one month’s practice before coming together to race each other on the day of the festival. 

Special Food

Zongzi

To this day the Chinese people all over the world, even where there are no dragon boat races, celebrate the festival by eating the specially prepared glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo leaves. 

      
                                

 

The Dragon Boats

The boats can be up to 120 feet in length with depth of about two and a half feet crewed by up to 40 paddlers. There is very little freeboard and a boat can easily become swamped. A large drum located in the middle or stern of the boat is beaten to maintain the paddlers rhythm. 

The bow of the boat is decorated with a dragon’s head and the stern with its tail. These are detachable, and when the boat is not in use, are often kept in the local temple, reflecting the religious significance of the festival. 

      

(Source: ebeijing.gov.cn)

Children Chinese – 1234567,Where is my friend

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

1,2,3,4,5,6,7
Where is my friend
Here he is, here he is
My friend is here

Topic: numbers, position

POSITION

zài to indicate the existence
哪里 nǎ lǐ where
这里 zhè lǐ here

(Source: www.chinese4kids.net)

Chinese Pinyin – Chinese Pinyin Writing Rules (2)

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

4 汉语拼音正词法基本规则

4.1 总原则

4.1.1 拼写普通话基本上以词为书写单位。

rén(人) pǎo(跑) hǎo(好) hé(和) hěn(很)

fúróng(芙蓉) qiǎokèlì(巧克力)

péngyou(朋友) yuèdú(阅读)

dìzhèn(地震) niánqīng(年轻)

zhòngshì(重视) wǎnhuì(晚会)

qiānmíng(签名) shìwēi(示威)

niǔzhuǎn(扭转) chuánzhī(船只)

dànshì(但是) fēicháng(非常)

diànshìjī(电视机) túshūguǎn(图书馆)

4.1.2 表示一个整体概念的双音节和三音节结构,连写。

gāngtiě(钢铁) wèndá(问答)

hǎifēng(海风) hóngqí(红旗)

dàhuì(大会) quánguó(全国)

zhòngtián(种田) kāihuì(开会)

dǎpò(打破) zǒulái(走来)

húshuō(胡说) dǎnxiǎo(胆小)

qiūhǎitáng(秋海棠) àiniǎozhōu(爱鸟周)

duìbuqǐ(对不起) chīdexiāo(吃得消)

 

(Source: www.chineselearner.com)